[SystemSafety] The Patriot Missile Failure (was Re: systemsafety Digest, Vol 34, Issue 5)

Matthew Squair mattsquair at gmail.com
Wed May 6 14:03:07 CEST 2015


I'd guess that given it was 70s tech a simple clock counter was seen as a
the obvious 'easy' choice. But that's just me conjecturing :)

Matthew Squair

MIEAust, CPEng
Mob: +61 488770655
Email; Mattsquair at gmail.com
Web: http://criticaluncertainties.com

On 6 May 2015, at 6:47 pm, Martyn Thomas <martyn at thomas-associates.co.uk>
wrote:

 Thanks, Matthew

You show that the RGA is a function of time, but do not explain why "time"
has to be the elapsed time since the system was started, rather than (say)
gps time, or time since the start of the current radar scan, or ...

Do you know the answer?

Martyn

On 06/05/2015 00:11, Matthew Squair wrote:

Hi Martyn,

 The time, along with position and velocity, is used in the calculation of
a parameter called the range gate which is used in track while scan radar
systems to tell the radar where to expect (correlate) a radar return for a
tracked object. Clock drift can cause the gate to drift away from the
actual radar return's location, once the difference gets past a certain
threshold the radar return and track will decorrelate and the radar will
loose (or drop) the track.

 The actual details of how this occurred on the day are a little more
complex, if you're interested see the case study at the link for more
detail http://wp.me/ax0Kp-2tK.

On Tue, May 5, 2015 at 6:56 PM, Martyn Thomas <
martyn at thomas-associates.co.uk> wrote:

>  Why did they need to keep the time, over a period of 100 hours, in order
> to determine how far away an incoming missile is? The two things appear to
> me to be unrelated.
>
> Martyn
>
> On 04/05/2015 21:57, Steve Tockey wrote:
>
>
>  Can static analysis catch this kind of defect:
>
>  https://www.ima.umn.edu/~arnold/disasters/patriot.html
>
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> The System Safety Mailing List
> systemsafety at TechFak.Uni-Bielefeld.DE
>
>


 --
 *Matthew Squair*
MIEAust CPEng

 Mob: +61 488770655
Email: MattSquair at gmail.com
 Website: www.criticaluncertainties.com <http://criticaluncertainties.com/>
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